milwiron@... wrote:
>> PS but first, History channel Modern Marvels tonight has rubber as the
>> subject for one of the hours, should repeat again in 3-4 hours.
>
>
> Alan, Yes, I said up front I've never been around PC board production but
> I'll have to thank you anyhow for your condescending replies, I'm sure it was
> the absolute best you could offer. It never ceases to amaze me that asking a
> serious, simple, polite question can result in such a smart ass attempt at a
> reply. Are you too intelligent for the rest of us, or too impatient to
> pointedly answer a question? Oops, I really don't want an answer.
Maybe you should read it again, I simply said why NOT try searching on Google
when you don't recognize what something is..
>
> Anyhow, a whole hour on the History Channel, who boy I am sorry I wasted all
> that time and money on Engineering and Polymeric Tech. courses.
I would be too if you were seriously thinking that latex would just fall
apart at a little heat.
>
> Just study notes alone concerning rubber, I've got a 4 inch thick notebook on
> natural elastomers and another on synthetic elastomers up in the attic plus a
> couple decades of work experience. If your "5 second search on Google", label
> reading or watching "Oprah" doesn't give you all the education you need you
> may want to try Dr. Phil.
>
I find it highly ironic that you'd make fun of that, you do realize that
every single person who might have searched 'latex solder mask' would have been
more knowledgable than yourself on it shortly after that five seconds? Far more
sage advice than you seem to give it credit for being.
Dr. Phil might not be a bad idea though, maybe he took some chem courses and
his books had a bit more info on what latex can actually handle. Real world
doesn't care much what it said in some book.
Alan